Lüdtke, Andreas and Möbus, Claus (2005) A Case Study for Using a Cognitive Model of Learned Carelessness in Cognitive Engineering. In: Proceedings of the 11th International Conference of Human-Computer Interaction (HCI International´05). Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc. 2005, Mahwah, New Jersey. ISBN 0-8058-5807-5

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Abstract

The goal of our work is to develop a methodology for automatically predicting potential pilot errors during the design of mode-based systems for modern cockpits. The main ingredient of this methodology is a cognitive model of pilot behaviour allowing to predict misconceptions in the pilot's mental procedure model based on a cognitive process called "learned carelessness". In a first stage we use this model inside a simulation platform to automatically degrade a normative procedure model in a psychological plausible way. In a second stage we apply formal verification techniques to exhaustively analyze what human errors can be caused by the degraded procedure. In this text we describe a case study conducted at the Lufthansa Flight Training Centre where we analysed a Piper Cheyenne autopilot.

Item Type: Book Section
Uncontrolled Keywords: pilot errors, design of mode-based systems, cognitive model, pilot behavior, misconceptions, pilot's mental model, learned carelessness, human error, Lufthansa Flight Training Centre, Piper Cheyenne, autopilot
Subjects: Generalities, computers, information > Computer science, internet
Philosophy and psychology > Psychology
Divisions: School of Computing Science, Business Administration, Economics and Law > Department of Computing Science
Date Deposited: 24 Oct 2014 09:43
Last Modified: 24 Oct 2014 09:43
URI: https://oops.uni-oldenburg.de/id/eprint/1946
URN: urn:nbn:de:gbv:715-oops-20272
DOI:
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